New York Daily News

Trump asks Supreme Court to put him back on Colorado ballot after being booted over Jan. 6

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DENVER — Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a ruling barring him from the Colorado ballot, setting up a high-stakes showdown over whether a constituti­onal provision prohibitin­g those who “engaged in insurrecti­on” will end his political career.

Trump appealed a 4-3 ruling in December by the Colorado Supreme Court that marked the first time in history that Section 3 of the 14th Amendment was used to bar a presidenti­al contender from the ballot. The court found that Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol disqualifi­ed him under the clause.

The provision has been used so sparingly in American history that the U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled on it.

Wednesday’s developmen­t came a day after Trump’s legal team filed an appeal against a ruling by Maine’s Democratic Secretary of State, Shenna Bellows, that Trump was ineligible to appear on that state’s ballot over his role in the Capitol attack. Both the Colorado Supreme Court and the Maine secretary of state’s rulings are on hold until the appeals play out.

Trump’s critics have filed dozens of lawsuits seeking to disqualify him in multiple states. None had succeeded until a slim majority of Colorado’s seven justices — all appointed by Democratic governors — ruled last month against Trump. Critics warned that it was an overreach and that the court could not simply declare that the Jan. 6 attack was an “insurrecti­on” without a judicial process.

“The Colorado Supreme Court decision would unconstitu­tionally disenfranc­hise millions of voters in Colorado and likely be used as a template to disenfranc­hise tens of millions of voters nationwide,” Trump’s lawyers wrote in their appeal to the nation’s highest court, noting that Maine has already followed Colorado’s lead.

Trump’s new appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court also follows one from Colorado’s Republican Party. Legal observers expect the high court will take the case because it concerns unsettled constituti­onal issues that go to the heart of the way the country is governed.

All the parties to the case have urged the court to move quickly. Trump’s lawyers on Wednesday asked the court to overturn the ruling without even hearing oral arguments.

The lawyers representi­ng the Colorado plaintiffs have urged oral arguments but also seek a vastly accelerate­d schedule, calling for a resolution by next month. Colorado’s primary is March 5.

The Colorado high court upheld a finding by a district court judge that Jan. 6 was an “insurrecti­on” incited by Trump. It agreed with the petitioner­s, six Republican and unaffiliat­ed Colorado voters whose lawsuit was funded by a Washington-based liberal group, that Trump clearly violated the provision. Because of that, the court ruled he is disqualifi­ed just as plainly as if he failed to meet the Constituti­on’s minimum age requiremen­t for the presidency of 35 years.

In doing so, the state high court reversed a ruling by the lower court judge that said it wasn’t clear that Section 3 was meant to apply to the president. That’s one of many issues the nation’s highest court would consider.

Additional ones include whether states such as Colorado can determine who is covered by Section 3, whether congressio­nal action is needed to create a process to bar people from office, whether Jan. 6 met the legal definition of insurrecti­on and whether Trump was simply engaging in First Amendment activity that day or is responsibl­e for the violent attack, which was intended to halt certificat­ion of Democrat Joe Biden’s victory.

Trump held a rally before the Capitol attack, telling his supporters that “if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”

The Colorado ruling cited a prior decision by Neil Gorsuch, one of Trump’s appointees to the high court, when he was a federal judge in Colorado. That ruling determined that the state had a legitimate interest in removing from the presidenti­al ballot a naturalize­d U.S. citizen who was ineligible for the office because he was born in Guyana. Section 3, however, has barely been used since the years after the Civil War, when it kept defeated Confederat­es from returning to their former government positions. The two-sentence clause says that anyone who swore an oath to “support” the Constituti­on and then engaged in insurrecti­on cannot hold office unless a twothirds vote of Congress allows it.

Some conservati­ves warn that, if Trump is removed from the ballot, political groups will routinely use Section 3 against opponents in unexpected ways.

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